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Missing Hong Kong bookseller resurfaces in TV interview Missing Hong Kong bookseller resurfaces in TV interview
(35 minutes later)
HONG KONG — A Hong Kong bookseller who has been missing for two months has reappeared in an interview with Chinese media, saying he wasn’t abducted but instead crossed illegally into mainland China to help authorities with an investigation. HONG KONG — A Hong Kong bookseller missing for two months has reappeared in an interview with Chinese media, insisting he wasn’t abducted and instead crossed illegally into mainland China to help authorities with an investigation.
The interview with Lee Bo, broadcast late Monday, came a day after another man that he worked with, Gui Minhai, purportedly confessed to illegally selling thousands of books by mail to mainland Chinese buyers.The interview with Lee Bo, broadcast late Monday, came a day after another man that he worked with, Gui Minhai, purportedly confessed to illegally selling thousands of books by mail to mainland Chinese buyers.
The 16-minute interview shown on Hong Kong-based pro-Beijing Phoenix TV appears to be an attempt to quell growing concern over the fates of Lee and Bo, who specialized in books on sensitive political topics banned in mainland China. The 16-minute interview shown on Hong Kong-based pro-Beijing Phoenix TV appears to be an attempt to quell growing concern over the fates of Lee, Gui and three other missing men linked to a publishing company that specialized in books on sensitive political topics banned in mainland China.
The case has raised fears about Beijing eroding civil liberties in Hong Kong, a semiautonomous Chinese city. Lee went missing Dec. 30 and the four others disappeared in October. The five worked for Mighty Current Media or its Causeway Bay Bookstore, whose books were popular with mainland Chinese visitors to Hong Kong.
The case drew international concern over fears Beijing was eroding the “one country, two systems” principle that allows Hong Kong to maintain civil liberties such as freedom of the press and a high degree of control over its own affairs.
Lee’s case in particular rang alarm bells because of suspicions he was snatched by mainland Chinese security agents who crossed into Hong Kong. Britain’s Foreign Office said in a report in February that Lee, a British citizen, was “involuntarily removed” to the mainland. However, Lee said the claims were false and were used being used by unnamed groups to hype up his case.
“After the Mighty Current affair emerged, I wanted to secretly go back to the mainland as soon as possible to resolve the company’s affairs, then secretly return to Hong Kong,” Lee said. He added he didn’t want anyone to know and didn’t want to leave any record of his journey at immigration checkpoints so he chose to use “illegal immigration,” but did not give further details.
Lee also said he planned to renounce his British right of abode, or residency rights, though it’s not clear why he used that term rather than citizenship.
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This story has been corrected to show that concern is over the fates of Lee and Gui, rather than Lee and Bo.
Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.